
FLTR: GSI/FAIR Research Director Professor Karlheinz Langanke,
Professor Nu Xu, Professor Taka Otsuka
and Professor Volker Koch - Image credit: GSI/FAIR
13th September 2023. Press release GSI/FAIR. Three world-renown scientists, Profs. Volker Koch, Nu Xu and Takaharu Otsuka, are currently spending long-term research
stays at GSI and FAIR and its partner universities in Darmstadt and
Frankfurt. They are analyzing and interpreting current experimental data
and preparing the first scientific experiments at FAIR in fruitful
interdisciplinary cooperation.
Professor Volker
Koch and Professor Nu Xu are both from the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory.
Volker Koch holds the professorship for theoretical heavy-ion physics
and has been the laboratory’s nuclear physics division head. Nu Xu is
professor for experimental heavy-ion physics and the former spokesman of
STAR, a flagship experiment at the Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collider
(RHIC) at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. Professor Takaharu Otsuka
held the chair of theoretical nuclear physics at the University of Tokyo
until his retirement. Taka Otsuka and Nu Xu are both recipients of
Humboldt Research Awards, while Volker Koch is currently an EMMI
Visiting Professor.
GSI and FAIR took the unique opportunity to
discuss with these colleagues in an interview the motivation why they
have chosen GSI for their long-term stay, and what personally fascinates
them from the many science options at FAIR. Despite very different
perspectives and different scientific expectations with regard to the
FAIR research pillars, the three scientists have one thing in common:
the anticipation of outstanding research prospects and decisive advances
in knowledge in a unique world leading research infrastructure at FAIR.
The whole interview can be read here:
GSI/FAIR: You all
three are world-leading scientists and come from prestigious
institutions. Why did you choose GSI for your research stays?
Volker Koch: The
Rhein-Main-Neckar region is the center of gravity in nuclear science,
in particular in my field of interest, which focuses on the properties
of the strong force at the high-density and high-energy frontiers as it
can be explored in heavy-ion collisions. There is for example the HADES
experiment, which has taken exciting data in their latest runs within
the FAIR Phase-0 program, which we try to understand now. It is of
great advantage to have many experts on campus and at the neighboring
universities with whom we can look at these data from very different
angles. In fact, I have missed such a stimulating scientific atmosphere
during the pandemic and I every much enjoy the daily discussion taking
place here. Of course, we also discuss the future opportunities, in
particular the CBM experiment at FAIR, which we hope will answer some of
the fundamental questions in our field of research.
Nu Xu: Indeed,
the phase diagram of Quantum Chromodynamics, which describes the
properties of the strong force as function of temperature and density,
has still several open fundamental questions. I was much involved in the
preparation and in the execution of experiments of the STAR
collaboration where we have tried to explore whether this phase diagram
exhibits a critical point like it is familiar to us from the phase
diagram of water. Unfortunately, the STAR experiment left a gap in the
data, which is needed to answer this question. The place from which we
expect the answer is the CBM experiment at FAIR. To prepare this unique
and scientifically extremely important experiment I am here.
Takaharu Otsuka: My
scientific interest is somewhat different from that of my colleagues as
I try to develop models, which describe the many facets of nuclear
structure. Here the frontier are exotic unstable nuclei, which for
example have a large number of extra neutrons compared to their stable
counterparts. These nuclei and their properties are, however, crucial if
we want to develop a general model, which describes the many phenomena
the nuclear many-body system exhibits. For example, we have learnt in
recent years that nuclear magic numbers, which are a cornerstone of
nuclear structure whose explanation was awarded a Nobel Prize, are
different in exotic from those in stable nuclei. We could recently show
that among others the tensor force plays a crucial role in these exotic
nuclei. In my career, I have benefitted very much from close contact to
experimentalists, which some years ago were my colleagues at RIKEN. Now I
think that in the future the NUSTAR experiments at FAIR will have the
leading role in understanding many aspects of the structure of exotic
nuclei beyond the present reach. In particular, I am interested in the
physics, which determines the limit of existence in very neutron-rich
nuclei where FAIR opens completely new perspectives. Therefore, I am
happy to intensify my collaboration with my theory and experiment
colleagues in Darmstadt. I hope that both sides will benefit from these
activities.
GSI/FAIR: Professor Xu, you mentioned the STAR
experiment at RHIC, which is one example that there are also other
facilities worldwide which explore the science which will be in the
focus at FAIR. Professor Otsuka, you referred to the Japanese flagship
facility RIKEN. Perhaps you can elaborate where you see the advantages
of FAIR and perhaps its uniqueness?
NX: The
Brookhaven activities are finished leaving important questions
unanswered. In my view, CBM is in the position to answer them. Actually,
if there were other facilities, which were better advanced than CBM, I
would have joined these activities. But there is none. If FAIR can
deliver SIS100 beams the CBM collaboration will be ready for data
taking. And the CBM experiment has the high-rate capabilities to decide
whether a critical point exists in the QCD phase diagram or not.
VK: Indeed,
to answer this fundamental science question statistics is the name of
the game and CBM has the capability to deliver the required rate of
data. This allows actually much more than to prove the existence of the
critical point. For example, one can also explore the symmetry energy at
densities twice or even three-times the value of saturation density, as
it exists inside of heavy nuclei like lead. Such high densities are of
crucial importance in many astrophysical environments, like
core-collapse supernovae or neutron star mergers. The CBM data will also
provide very valuable constraints for the nuclear Equation of State,
which governs the structure of neutron stars, which are the most compact
objects which one can study directly in the Universe. In fact, there
are so many upcoming activities in astrophysics opening the era of
multi-messenger exploration of the Universe, which all are intimately
related to science, which will be, often for the first time, explored at
FAIR. During my stay in Darmstadt, my colleagues and I have developed
several new ideas how this complementarity can be optimally explored. I
am really looking forward that FAIR will be switched on and the CBM and
NUSTAR experiments start. This will be a new game in town, as we say in
California.
TO: The FAIR facility offers
significantly higher bombarding energies than the other facilities. This
allows to explore mass regions in the nuclear chart which are not
easily accessible with other accelerators, making the global activities
complementary in many aspects. This opens exciting perspectives for my
research interest. It is very exciting that FAIR will soon deliver for
example first data on the very neutron-rich nuclei, which build the
third peak in the astrophysical r-process, which is often referred to as
the "gold peak". We have predicted the half-lives for the nuclei in the
gold peak and it will be nice to see whether we have been right. Let me
stress another important point. Also many activities at FAIR, although
unique on the global level, are very complimentary. Take the symmetry
energy, which my colleagues Volker Koch and Nu Xu want to study at very
high densities. It is also relevant for astrophysical applications to
know it at densities at and below saturation. This behavior can be
studied with the R3B experiment within the NUSTAR collaboration.
GSI/FAIR:
Your home countries have very strong activities in heavy-ion and
nuclear structure science. Which role does FAIR play for these
communities?
VK: The US Nuclear Physics
community is currently preparing its Longe Range Plan, which also
addresses the future opportunities of the research on high-density
nuclear matter, that is the behavior of the QCD phase diagram at high
densities as it will be explored at FAIR. I am not personally involved
in the writing team, but I know that the intellectual interest of my
theory colleagues in this field is tremendous. Personally, I am also
convinced that there will be a growing American participation in CBM.
NX: I
share the view of my colleague Volker Koch concerning the interest in
the US. But I like to add, that also in my mother country China there is
a very large interest in the CBM physics, carried by six institutions
including many postdoctoral and graduate students. The Chinese
colleagues have been involved in the STAR experiment at RHIC and bring
their expertise now to CBM. To underline the Chinese interest,
components of the time-of-flight detector system for CBM have been built
in China. They are tested and ready to be employed at FAIR. We need a
SIS100 beam.
TO: There is an existing strong
interaction between the Japanese and GSI activities in nuclear
structure, but also in other FAIR research fields like atomic or
biophysics. Some FAIR detectors developed by the NUSTAR collaboration
have already been tested and used in experiments at RIKEN. But the
exchange is in both directions. One interesting research field at FAIR
will be hypernuclei, which is regular nuclei to which a lambda particle,
which carries a strange quark, is added. Japan has a long history in
hypernuclear research. But now we bring activities to FAIR based on a
Memorandum of Understanding signed by RIKEN and GSI/FAIR where we
jointly open research on neutron-rich hypernuclei. FAIR provides the
SIS100 accelerator and the Super FRS, the equipment to produce such
really exotic nuclei, and RIKEN develops and builds a novel detector
which allows to study these hypernuclei. RIKEN has in fact very positive
experience with such collaborative efforts abroad, for example, with a
dedicated hadron physics program at Brookhaven. I am sure that also the
RIKEN-FAIR project will be a success.
GSI/FAIR: What is the scientific highlight you personally wish to see delivered by FAIR?
NX: With
its high-rate capability and the other available observables, CBM will
answer the question whether a critical point exists in the QCD phase
diagram, or not. CBM will also constrain the nuclear equation of state
to a level that it has a very strong impact on the understanding of
astrophysical objects like neutron stars or supernovae. I would like to
add that while the high-energy programs at CERN focus on the properties
of the quark-gluon plasma – the form of matter as it exists in the very
early phase of the Universe, here we concentrate on the properties of
matter at high densities. If CERN is the high-energy frontier, FAIR is
the high-density frontier. Both programs are complementary to each other
and are both necessary for understanding the QCD phase diagram.
VK: The
critical point and the equation of state are certainly also on the top
of my list. But CBM can do more, perhaps answer questions which we do
not even think about now. For example, recent lattice QCD calculations
predict that the interaction between two Omega baryons is attractive.
CBM with its very high event rate is likely the only experiment, which
can check this prediction.
TO: In general, I
expect from the NUSTAR experiments at FAIR decisive progress in our
general understanding of the nucleus as a many-body system, already from
phase 0 experiments and then more once FAIR is operational. It would
be quite exciting to understand the boundaries of nuclear existence as a
function of neutron excess but also in the regime of superheavy nuclei,
derived from nucleons as the fundamental building blocks and the strong
and Coulomb forces acting between them. But I personally would also
like to explore whether hypernuclei might be a tool to probe the
emergence of nuclear shapes. There are some hints, which have recently
emerged that nuclei might have a wider spectrum of geometric shapes than
usually assumed.
GSI/FAIR: Thank you very much for this
discussion. We wish you a successful stay in Darmstadt and many fruitful
returns to GSI and later to FAIR.